Fluvio‐thermal erosion and thermal denudation in the yedoma region of northern Alaska: Revisiting the Itkillik River exposure

Riverbank erosion in yedoma regions strongly affects landscape evolution, biogeochemical cycling, sediment transport, and organic and nutrient fluxes to the Arctic Ocean. Since 2006, we have studied the 35‐m‐high Itkillik River yedoma bluff in northern Alaska, whose retreat rate during 1995–2010 was...

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Veröffentlicht in:Permafrost and periglacial processes 2021-04, Vol.32 (2), p.277-298
Hauptverfasser: Shur, Yuri, Jones, Benjamin M., Kanevskiy, Mikhail, Jorgenson, Torre, Jones, Melissa K. Ward, Fortier, Daniel, Stephani, Eva, Vasiliev, Alexander
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 277
container_title Permafrost and periglacial processes
container_volume 32
creator Shur, Yuri
Jones, Benjamin M.
Kanevskiy, Mikhail
Jorgenson, Torre
Jones, Melissa K. Ward
Fortier, Daniel
Stephani, Eva
Vasiliev, Alexander
description Riverbank erosion in yedoma regions strongly affects landscape evolution, biogeochemical cycling, sediment transport, and organic and nutrient fluxes to the Arctic Ocean. Since 2006, we have studied the 35‐m‐high Itkillik River yedoma bluff in northern Alaska, whose retreat rate during 1995–2010 was up to 19 m/yr, which is among the highest rates worldwide. This study extends our previous observations of bluff evolution and shows that average bluff‐top retreat rates decreased from 8.7–10.0 m/yr during 2011–2014 to 4.5–5.8 m/yr during 2015–2019, and bluff‐base retreat rates for the same time period decreased from 4.7–7.5 m/yr to 1.3–1.7 m/yr, correspondingly. Bluff evolution initially involves rapid fluvio‐thermal erosion at the base and block collapse, following by slowdown in river erosion and continuing thermal denudation of the retreating headwall with formation of baydzherakhs. Eventually, input of sediment and water from the headwall diminishes, vegetation develops, and slope gradually stabilizes. The step change in the fluvial–geomorphic system has resulted in a 60% decline in the volumetric mobilization of sediment and organic carbon between 2011 and 2019. Our findings stress the importance of sustained observations at key permafrost region study sites to elucidate critical information related to past and potential landscape evolution in the Arctic.
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subjects Bank erosion
Biogeochemistry
Cliffs
Denudation
Evolution
Fluxes
Geography, Physical
Geology
Geomorphology
ground ice
Headwalls
intermediate layer
Nutrient cycles
Nutrient transport
Organic carbon
Permafrost
Physical Geography
Physical Sciences
Polar environments
River banks
River erosion
Riverbanks
Rivers
Science & Technology
Sediment
Sediment transport
Sediments
Soil erosion
thermal denudation
thermal erosion
yedoma
title Fluvio‐thermal erosion and thermal denudation in the yedoma region of northern Alaska: Revisiting the Itkillik River exposure
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